One View
The test of any utterance in a language is whether the listener can understand what the speaker has said.
I can understand the expression 'a little bit pedantic' - so 'a little bit pedantic' is a correct use of the term.
Another Opinion
I can understand the term 'a little bit unqiue' but that's not a valid sentence, as something is either unique or it isn't.
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Another Opinion
'The test of any utterance in a language is whether the listener can understand what the speaker has said.' - Not so. Me no spick Eengleesh is perfectable comprehensible but is not very good and make make the speaker the object of amusement,
I take the question to be whether pedantry is in some sense quantifiable, or whether one simply is or is not pedantic. Surely, it is perfectly possible to be somewhat pedantic at times.
Pedantic has three syllables.
She's accurate because she's so pedantic. His pedantic answers to simple questions doesn't help the beginners.
Strictly correct usage (if a bit pedantic), the term should be "balance" - "scales" does not have a valid singular in this context
He was so pedantic that he wasted twelve hours on just the title page.
The correct spelling is "a little bit."
No, the term "pedantic" is not being used correctly in this context. Pedantic refers to being overly concerned with minute details or showing off one's knowledge in a boastful way. In this context, a better term to use might be "basic" or "elementary."
with a little bit of this and a little bit of that
carla mono
translucent is a little bit clear and a little bit not
The Monkees
do not get it In the middle :)
Little is an adjective, bit is a noun, "little bit" taken together is a noun phrase.